San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

French Open

- By Howard Fendrich ASSOCIATED PRESS

Simona Halep outlasts Sloane Stephens to win her first Grand Slam title.

PARIS — Maybe all of those losses in Grand Slam finals helped Simona Halep actually win one.

She’d gone 0-3 in matches with a major trophy on the line before facing Sloane Stephens for the French Open title Saturday, so there was plenty to remember: what it felt like to give a lead away, to make a key mistake, to walk away with regrets.

“All the experience from those three finals that I lost ... was a positive thing,” Halep said, “and gave me a little bit more power to believe.”

Halep added Grand Slam trophy No. 1 to her No. 1 ranking, coming back from a set and a break down to beat Stephens 3-6, 6-4, 6-1 and win the championsh­ip at Roland Garros in a match made up of long points and key momentum swings.

“That’s the most important thing — that I stay there focused,” said Halep, the first Romanian to collect a major title since her manager, Virginia Ruzici, at the 1978 French Open. “I believed. And I never gave up.”

The 26-year-old Halep was describing this particular match. She could have been speaking about her career.

Halep lost two previous finals at Roland Garros — against Maria Sharapova in 2014, then Jelena Ostapenko in 2017 despite leading by a set and 3-0 in the second. Her third runner-up finish came against Caroline Wozniacki at the Australian Open in January.

“Been kicked in the stomach a couple of times when she’s had chances,” said Halep’s coach, Darren Cahill.

“They say the destinatio­n is more beautiful if there’s a bit of a bumpy road and you eventually get there. And that’s what happened to her today.”

On a muggy afternoon, Halep began slowly, unable to solve Stephens, the 10th-seeded American who won her first Grand Slam title at last year’s U.S. Open. Both women are adept at defense, figuring out ways — via speed, strength, skill and instinct — to get nearly every ball back over the net. They’re also both able to switch to offense in a snap.

Those traits lent themselves to engaging exchanges of 10 strokes, 20 strokes or more, sometimes interrupte­d by spectators who would gasp or begin to clap, thinking that a point was over when it still was not.

One key: Halep began putting a little more air under the ball, being a little less aggressive, waiting for Stephens to make mistakes. That worked. Stephens ended up with 39 unforced errors, 13 more than Halep.

 ?? Cameron Spencer / Getty Images ?? Romania’s Simona Halep plays a backhand against the United States’ Sloane Stephens during the French Open women’s singles finals Saturday at Roland Garros in Paris. Halep prevailed 3-6, 6-4, 6-1.
Cameron Spencer / Getty Images Romania’s Simona Halep plays a backhand against the United States’ Sloane Stephens during the French Open women’s singles finals Saturday at Roland Garros in Paris. Halep prevailed 3-6, 6-4, 6-1.
 ?? Corinne Dubreuil / Associated Press ?? Prior to winning the French Open on Saturday, Halep was 0-3 in Grand Slam finals.
Corinne Dubreuil / Associated Press Prior to winning the French Open on Saturday, Halep was 0-3 in Grand Slam finals.

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